“Discovered, currently not indexed” is one of the more frustrating statuses in Google Search Console. Google knows your page exists. It has seen it. But it has not crawled or indexed it, and it has not told you when it plans to. Understanding why this happens and how to fix it is one of the quickest wins available in technical SEO.
What “Discovered, Currently Not Indexed” Actually Means
When Google finds a URL, either through your sitemap or by following a link, it adds it to a crawl queue. “Discovered, currently not indexed” means the URL is in that queue but has not yet been processed. Google is aware of it but has decided to defer crawling it, usually because it is allocating its crawl budget to higher-priority pages on your site or across the web.
This status is common on larger sites, sites with slow server response times, and sites with large amounts of low-value or thin content. It is not a penalty. It is a signal that Google does not currently consider the affected pages high enough priority to crawl promptly. Addressing that signal requires fixing the underlying reasons why Google is deprioritising those pages. Our SEO service includes technical audits that identify and resolve indexing issues systematically.
Common Causes and Fixes
| Cause | Why It Happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Low crawl budget | Site too large or slow for Googlebot to process fully | Improve page speed, fix crawl traps, reduce URL bloat |
| Weak internal linking | Pages have no internal links pointing to them | Add contextual internal links from high-authority pages |
| Thin or duplicate content | Page offers no unique value versus existing indexed pages | Improve content depth and uniqueness, consolidate duplicates |
| Server errors | Googlebot receives 5xx responses during crawl | Fix server configuration and monitor uptime |
| Crawl traps | Infinite pagination or parameter URLs consuming crawl budget | Block parameter URLs in robots.txt or GSC settings |
Crawl Budget: The Core Issue
Crawl budget is the number of URLs Googlebot is willing to crawl on your site within a given period. Every site has a budget, and Google allocates it based on the perceived value and speed of your pages. If your site has thousands of low-value URLs, parameter-generated URLs, or pagination pages consuming budget, high-value content pages can get deprioritised.
Fixing crawl budget issues means reducing the number of URLs Googlebot needs to process. Block URL parameters in Google Search Console, add canonical tags to paginated content, and consolidate thin or duplicate pages. A leaner URL architecture lets Google spend its crawl budget on the pages that matter most to your business.
Internal Linking Is Often the Fastest Fix
Pages with no internal links pointing to them are the most likely to sit in the “discovered, currently not indexed” state for extended periods. If Google encounters a URL only in your sitemap and nowhere else on your site, it has limited signal that the page is important enough to prioritise.
Adding 2 to 3 contextual internal links from well-indexed, high-traffic pages to the affected URL is often enough to trigger a crawl within days. The links should appear naturally within relevant body content, not in footers or navigation where they carry less weight. This is one reason why link building and internal link optimisation are managed together in our programmes.
Content Quality Signals Matter
If Google has seen your page and deprioritised it, content quality is often a contributing factor. Pages with thin content, content that closely duplicates other pages on your site, or pages that do not clearly serve a user intent are systematically deprioritised. Google is increasingly selective about what it indexes, and pages that do not demonstrate clear value for users are left in the discovered state.
Review affected pages for word count, uniqueness, and intent matching. A page that answers a specific question thoroughly, with structured headings, relevant data, and proper schema markup, is far more likely to be indexed promptly than a page with a few paragraphs of generic text.
Server Speed and Stability
Slow server response times reduce the number of pages Googlebot can crawl per visit. If your server consistently takes more than 200ms to respond, Googlebot crawls fewer pages per session and deprioritises your site in its overall scheduling. Use Google Search Console’s Crawl Stats report to check your average response time and identify any server errors that may be interrupting crawls.
How to Request Indexing and Validate
Once you have addressed the underlying causes, use the URL Inspection tool in Google Search Console to request indexing for affected pages. This moves them to the front of the crawl queue faster than waiting for Googlebot to return naturally. After requesting indexing, monitor the Coverage report weekly. Pages should move from “discovered, currently not indexed” to “indexed” within 2 to 4 weeks if the fixes were effective.
If a page returns to the discovered state after being indexed, it typically means the content quality issue was not fully resolved. Revisit the page, deepen the content, and strengthen its internal link profile before requesting indexing again.
Before Requesting Re-indexing
If you are working through a large number of affected URLs and need a systematic approach, get in touch with Digital Climbs. We handle technical SEO audits and indexing issues as part of our full SEO service.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does “discovered, currently not indexed” mean?+−
“Discovered, currently not indexed” is a Google Search Console status indicating that Google knows the URL exists, typically because it found it in a sitemap or via a link, but has not yet crawled or indexed it. This usually means Google deprioritised the URL due to crawl budget constraints or questions about its value.
Is “discovered, currently not indexed” a penalty?+−
No. It is not a manual penalty or algorithmic demotion. It means Google has deferred crawling the page, not that it has decided to exclude it permanently. Most pages in this state can be resolved by improving crawl budget allocation and content quality.
How long does it take for a discovered page to get indexed?+−
It varies widely. A page with strong internal links on a high-authority site can move from discovered to indexed within days. A page on a slow or low-authority site with weak internal links may remain in this state for weeks or months without intervention.
Does requesting indexing in GSC fix this immediately?+−
Not always. GSC indexing requests move a URL into the crawl queue faster, but Google still decides whether to index it based on its quality assessment. If the underlying issues of content quality, crawl budget, or internal linking are not addressed, requesting indexing may not resolve the status.
